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| - "Take the Money and Run" is a song from Teacher's Pet: The Movie where after successfully becoming human and earning money, Spot Helperman, now Scott Leadready II and Leonard Helperman, begins to buy himself new things. It is not to be confused with the Steve Miller Band song of the same title. It was performed by Jack Sheldon, who sang "Conjunction Junction" and "I'm Just a Bill" in Schoolhouse Rock!
- Take the Money and Run is the second episode of the fourteenth season of CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.
- Take the Money and Run is a song by Steve Miller Band which was the first song Miller let a rap group sample. He let Run-DMC use it in 2001 with Everlast also on vocals. Miller agreed only after hearing the song and liking what they did with it. In 2006, the band released a 30th Anniversary Edition of the Fly Like An Eagle album. Included as a bonus track was "Take The Joker And Run," which is an acoustic version of "Take the Money and Run" sung over an early version of "The Joker." (thanks, Bertrand - Paris, France) {| class="collapsible collapsed" style="width: 100%; text-align: center;"
- "Take the Money and Run" is a song by Steve Miller Band which was the first song Miller let a rap group sample. He let Run-DMC use it in 2001 with Everlast also on vocals. Miller agreed only after hearing the song and liking what they did with it. In 2006, the band released a 30th Anniversary Edition of the Fly Like An Eagle album. Included as a bonus track was "Take The Joker And Run," which is an acoustic version of "Take the Money and Run" sung over an early version of "The Joker." (thanks, Bertrand - Paris, France) The title is also the name of an unrelated 1969 Woody Allen film. (thanks, Brett - Edmonton, Canada) The song was also done in a Country style by Canadian Julian Austin in 2000. It's on his Back in Your Life CD. The song always had a Country feel to it, so it works well with
- Take the Money and Run (1969) is a Mockumentary co-written by Woody Allen and Mickey Rose, and marked Allen's full-fledged directorial debut. It chronicles the life of Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain Protagonist Virgil Starkwell and his wife Louise. Through exclusive interviews with his family, friends and teachers, we learn more about Virgil’s past, upbringing, and his love of crime and the cello. The film received critical acclaim, cementing Woody Allen’s Auteur License that he has enjoyed for the rest of his career.
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